Oman Daily Observer

Philadelph­ia says no to totally cashless future

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NEW YORK: With an increasing number of US businesses no longer accepting cash, Philadelph­ia — the City of Brotherly Love — is taking a stand to protect the socalled “unbanked” and will force merchants to accept greenbacks.

It will be the first major US city to outright reject a trend that has seen more and more retail outlets, especially restaurant­s, move to only accept payments via credit or debit cards and mobile phones.

Consumers and businesses who support digital payments say they are faster and more practical, but opponents say such practices exclude the “unbanked” — those without bank accounts or credit cards.

Philadelph­ia Mayor Jim Kenney recently signed into law an amendment to the city’s Fair Practices Ordinance prohibitin­g stores and restaurant­s from refusing to accept cash, calling it “unlawful discrimina­tion.”

The measure will go into effect on July 1.

Despite the cashless trend, the United States remains far behind other countries in terms of digital payment technology. In China, paying by smartphone is widely used.

According to data published by the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, 32 per cent of all consumer transactio­ns were made with cash in 2015, down from 40 per cent in 2012.

According to a study by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporatio­n, 6.5 per cent of American households were “unbanked” in 2017 — a figure that has steadily declined since 2011, but which still accounts for nearly eight million households.

Beyond the action taken in Philadelph­ia, state lawmakers in New Jersey passed a bill in February that would make it illegal to run a cashless store, but Democratic Governor Phil Murphy has not yet signed it.

In New York and San Francisco, initiative­s are working their way through legislativ­e channels, but no city council votes are scheduled for now.

Lawmakers in Washington and Chicago have passed similar legislatio­n, but they have not yet been ratified.

That makes Massachuse­tts the only US state so far which has a law on the books forcing all merchants to accept cash. But the measure, adopted more than 40 years ago, has not been applied in practice.

Fast-casual salad chain Sweetgreen, which no longer accepts cash in any of its restaurant­s, declined to comment when asked by AFP how it would implement the measure passed in Philadelph­ia.

An increasing number of US businesses are only taking payments by card or mobile phone, but amid a backlash, Philadelph­ia is insisting that cash be accepted everywhere

 ?? — Reuters ?? Samsung’s new Samsung Pay mobile wallet system is demonstrat­ed at its Australian launch in Sydney.
— Reuters Samsung’s new Samsung Pay mobile wallet system is demonstrat­ed at its Australian launch in Sydney.

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